Dictionary Definition
beggar n : a pauper who lives by begging [syn:
mendicant]
Verb
1 be beyond the resources of; "This beggars
description!"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From beggare, from beggen + -arePronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛɡə(r)
Noun
- A person who begs.
- 1983, Rosen, Stanley. Plato’s Sophist: The Drama of Original
& Image. South Bend, Indiana, USA: St. Augustine’s Press, p.
62.
- Odysseus has returned to his home disguised as a beggar.
- 1983, Rosen, Stanley. Plato’s Sophist: The Drama of Original
& Image. South Bend, Indiana, USA: St. Augustine’s Press, p.
62.
- A person suffering from extreme poverty.
- 1883, Robert
Louis Stevenson, Treasure
Island
- I'm to be a poor, crawling beggar, sponging for rum, when I might be rolling in a coach!
- 1883, Robert
Louis Stevenson, Treasure
Island
Synonyms
Translations
person who begs
- Czech: žebrák
- Finnish: kerjäläinen
- French: mendiant
- German: Bettler
- Greek: ζητιάνος, ζητιάνα
- Hebrew: קַבּצָן (kabtzan)
- Norwegian: tigger
- Polish: żebrak
- Spanish: mendigo
person suffering poverty
- Finnish: keppikerjäläinen, köyhä
- Portuguese: mendigo
- Spanish: mendigo
- Swedish: tiggare
Derived terms
Verb
- To make a beggar of someone; impoverish.
- To exhaust the resources of; to outdo.
Derived terms
Translations
to make a beggar of someone
- Finnish: köyhdyttää, köyhtyä (reflexive)
to exhaust resources of
- Finnish: köyhdyttää
Extensive Definition
Begging means to request something in a
supplicating manner, with the implication that the person
who is begging will suffer emotional and/or physical harm if the
request is not granted. As such, the term is applicable not only to
individual persons, but also to groups, such as street corners or
public transport, and encountering a stranger who requests money, food, shelter or other
things.
Begging may be the only possible means of
survival for persons with no job and no access to social
security, particularly undocumented refugees or subsistence
farmers in times of famine or drought.
Begging may also be a means by which persons with
drug, alcohol, or psychiatric
problems which prevent them selling their labour choose to sustain
themselves, in preference to living with families, or in
institutions, which they may dislike.
In a strictly free-market
capitalist system,
begging is one of only three possible ways of surviving; the other
two are selling labour,
and living on the income
from investments.
Since relatively few people have sufficient investments to generate
a living
wage, it follows that people who are unable to sell their
labour for any reason are
often forced to beg. In some cases, the descent from a middle-class
lifestyle to begging can happen within a short period of time, and
this is a popular theme in contemporary
fiction.
One of the advantages often claimed for a
social
security economy over a free market
economy is that fewer people are forced to suffer the indignity of
begging to survive.
Begging is also referred to as sponging, spanging
(short for "spare-changing") or (in American
English) panhandling.
In many towns and cities throughout the world, it
is common to see beggars asking for currency, food, or other items.
Beggars often beg for spare change equipped with cups, boxes, hats,
or other items into which currency can be placed and sometimes
display signs with messages such as "Help me. I'm homeless."
Begging is distinct from, but often associated
with, busking, in which
persons make music (of
varying quality) in public
places and request donations from the public.
Aggressive panhandling
Aggressive panhandling involves the solicitation
of donations in an inappropriate and intimidating manner. This is
not mugging, but rather
a "borderline" activity which is often prohibited by law. Examples
include:
- Soliciting near ATM banking machines.
- Soliciting from customers inside a store or restaurant.
- Soliciting near or at religious or holy sites (such as in the Old City of Jerusalem or the Vatican City).
- Extending the head and both arms, or even the hand, into a car window to solicit.
- Soliciting after dark, in a secluded area.
- Approaching individuals from behind, as they are exiting their vehicles, to solicit.
- Soliciting in a loud voice, often accompanied with wild gesticulations.
- The use of insults, profanity, or veiled threats.
- Refusing to take "No" for an answer, and following an individual.
- Demanding more money after a donation has been given.
- Invasion of personal space, cornering, blocking, or inappropriate touching.
- A "team" of several beggars approaching an individual at once, often surrounding the person.
- "Camping out" in a spot where begging negatively influences some other business (such as in front of a store or restaurant) in the hope that the business owner will give money to make the beggar go away.
- There have been reports of beggars who will attempt to have their limbs amputated in the hope that they can solicit more out of sympathy.
Restriction of beggars
Canada
The province of Ontario introduced its Safe Streets Act in 1999 to restrict specific kinds of begging, particularly certain narrowly-defined cases of "aggressive" or abusive panhandling. In 2001 this law survived a court challenge under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The law was further upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal in January 2007.British
Columbia enacted its own Safe
Streets Act in 2004 which resembles the Ontario law. There are
also critics in that province who oppose such laws.
United States
In many larger cities, such as Chicago, Illinois, panhandling has been banned. In Chicago, there are a number of signs at regular intervals reminding people that peddling is banned. This rarely dissuades the beggar, and the constitutionality of such bans has not been firmly established by case law. In 2004, the city of Orlando, Florida passed an ordinance (Orlando Municipal Code section 43.86) requiring panhandlers to obtain a permit from the municipal police department. The ordinance further makes it a crime to panhandle in the commercial core of downtown Orlando, as well as within 50 feet of any bank or automated teller machine. It is also considered a crime in Orlando for panhandlers to make false or untrue statements, or to disguise themselves, to solicit money, and to use money obtained for a claim of a specific purpose (e.g. food) to be spent on anything else (e.g. drugs). The potential for these latter restrictions to be enforced is minimal.In Santa Cruz,
CA, there are regulations for panhandlers on where they can and
cannot "Spange". For example, they must be a certain distance away
from the door of any business.
The Atlanta,
Georgia, city council approved a ban on panhandling on August 16,
2005, and
Mayor Shirley
Franklin is expected to sign the ban into law. In most, if not
all, US jurisdictions, beggars can be arrested and jailed under the
vagrancy
laws.
United Kingdom
Begging is also banned in the London Underground System, although there are designated "busking spots" that can be hired in some stations that allow musicians to entertain travellers.Begging and spirituality
In some countries begging is much more tolerated
and in certain cases encouraged. In many, perhaps most, traditional
religions, it is considered that a person who gives alms to a worthy beggar, such as a
spiritual seeker, gains religious merit.
In traditional Christianity, the rich are
encouraged to give to the poor. Speaking of criminals, prostitutes,
beggars, and other people despised by society, Jesus said, "I am
the least of these," which is taken to mean that giving to a beggar
is the equivalent of giving to Jesus himself.
In many Hindu traditions,
spiritual seekers,
known as sadhus, beg for
food. This is because fruitive activity, such as farming or
shopkeeping, is regarded as a materialistic distraction
from the search for moksha, or spiritual liberation.
Begging, on the other hand, promotes humility and gratitude, not
only towards the individuals who are giving food, but towards the
Universe in general. This helps the sadhu attain a state of bliss or Samadhi.
In traditional Shaivite
Hinduism in particular, old men, having lived a full life as a
householder in the world, frequently give up material possessions
and become wandering ascetic mendicants (sadhus), spending their last
months or years seeking spiritual enlightenment. Villagers gain
religious merit by giving food and other necessities to these
ascetics.
In Buddhism, all
monks and nuns traditionally live by begging
for alms, as did the
historical Gautama
Buddha himself. This is, among other reasons, so that lay people can
gain religious merit by giving food, medicines, and other essential
items to the monks. The monks seldom need to plead for food; in
villages and towns throughout modern Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, and other
Buddhist countries, householders can often be found at dawn every
morning streaming down the road to the local temple to give food to
the monks.
There is also a long traditional of rather less
spiritual beggars, in India and elsewhere, who are simply begging
as a means to obtain material wealth. Some are even beggars for
generations, and continue their family tradition of begging. A few
beggars in the subcontinent even have sizable wealth, which they
accumulate by "employing" other, newer beggars. They can claim to
have territories, and then may engage in verbal and physical abuse
of encroaching beggars.
In Europe, women from
the poorer countries of the continent (e.g. Bulgaria) are
sometimes forced by organized gangs to beg in cities in Western
Europe such as Barcelona, the
proceeds being collected by the gangs.
Use of funds
A common criticism of beggars is that they spend money received on irresponsible or unnecessary items, particularly on drugs, alcohol or tobacco. This is often stated as a reason for not giving money to panhandlers. Also, in many communities in developed countries, various state and private charitable social services may be available such as welfare, soup kitchens and homeless shelters that may reduce any survival need for begging.A 2002 study of 54 panhandlers in Toronto
reported that of a median monthly income of $638 Canadian
dollars (CAD), those interviewed spent a median of $200 CAD on
food and $192 CAD on alcohol, tobacco and illegal drugs, according
to Income and spending patterns among panhandlers, by Rohit Bose
and Stephen W. Hwang. The Fraser
Institute criticized this study citing problems with potential
exclusion of lucrative forms of begging and the unreliability of
reports from the panhandlers who were polled in the Bose/Hwang
study.
In North America, panhandling money is widely
reported to support substance abuse and other addictions. For
example, outreach workers in downtown Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Canada, surveyed
that city's panhandling community and determined that approximately
three-quarters use donated money to buy tobacco products while
two-thirds buy solvents or alcohol. In Midtown Manhattan, one
outreach worker anecdotally commented to the New York Times that
substance abuse accounts for 90 percent of panhandling funds.
Because of this, some advise those wishing to
give to beggars to give gift cards or vouchers for food or
services, and not cash.
Begging on the Internet
Begging like other activities has also adapted to the net taking on an "e-panhandling" role. Instead of begging on the streets, cyber panhandlers set up a website where they "beg" for money. Later variants tried to request money for their personal needs that were beyond their financial ability with some success. Begging has also become commonplace in the chatrooms of various gambling and poker websites. In poker sites, one will frequently see someone claiming that they are so good at the game that if someone lends them 10 dollars, that they'll have it back to the lender with interest in a very short period of time. These may be desperate gaming addicts who have run dry, or they may not gamble at all and simply withdraw the money for their own use. Players of online games may beg for in-game currency, such as Gold in MMOs or Lindens in second life, which can be converted to real world currency.History of begging
There are few, if any, current techniques for begging which have not been used for hundreds of years, or are not based on older techniques, adapted to modern technology. Beggars rarely recorded their techniques, and often used Thieves' cant to disguise their own communication. What is known of them is largely from records of law enforcement, penitential or rogue literature. From early modern England the best examples are Thomas Harman, and Robert Greene in his coney-catching pamphlets. There is no reason to suppose that what he recorded was new. There are similar writers for many European countries in the early modern period.Notable beggars
- Bampfylde Moore Carew self styled King of the Beggars
- Lazarus
- Nicholas Jennings in Thomas Harman's Caveat for Common Cursitors
- Omar
- Ryan Larkin
References
Further material
- Born Losers: A History of Failure in America, by Scott A. Sandage (Harvard University Press, 2005).
beggar in Arabic: تسول
beggar in German: Bettler
beggar in Persian: گدا
beggar in French: Mendiant
beggar in Indonesian: Mengemis
beggar in Hebrew: קבצנות
beggar in Dutch: Bedelen
beggar in Japanese: 乞食
beggar in Polish: Żebranie
beggar in Portuguese: Esmola
beggar in Russian: Попрошайничество
beggar in Sicilian: Limusinanti
beggar in Simple English: Begging
beggar in Serbian: Просјачење
beggar in Finnish: Kerjääminen
beggar in Swedish: Tiggeri
beggar in Thai: ขอทาน
beggar in Vietnamese: Cái Bang
beggar in Chinese: 行乞
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Arab,
Bowery bum, almsman,
almswoman, asker, baffle, bankrupt, beach bum, beachcomber, beggarly
fellow, blighter,
bloke, bo, budmash, bum, bummer, cadger, caitiff, casual, challenge, chap, charity case, coupon
clippers, deadbeat,
defy, derelict, devil, dogie, down-and-out,
down-and-outer, drifter,
drone, drunkard, fellow, freeloader, gamin, gamine, good-for-naught,
good-for-nothing, guttersnipe, guy, hardcase, hobo, homeless waif, human wreck,
idle rich, idler, impoverish, indigent, landloper, lazzarone, leisure class,
loafer, losel, lounge lizard, lowlife, lumpen proletariat,
man, mauvais sujet, mean
wretch, mendicant,
mendicant friar, mendicant order, moocher, mucker, mudlark, no-good, nonworker, panhandler, parasite, pauper, pauperize, pauvre diable,
penniless man, person,
petitioner, piker, pilgarlic, poor creature, poor
devil, poor man, poorling, prayer, ragamuffin, ragman, ragpicker, reduce, rentiers, rounder, sad case, sad sack,
schnorrer, scrounger, ski bum, skid-row
bum, spiv, sponge, sponger, starveling, stiff, stray, street Arab, street urchin,
suitor, sundowner, suppliant, supplicant, supplicator, surf bum,
swagman, swagsman, tatterdemalion, tennis
bum, the unemployable, the unemployed, tramp, truant, turnpiker, urchin, vag, vagabond, vagrant, vaurien, waif, waifs and strays, want, wastrel, welfare client,
worthless fellow, wretch